Restaurant in Kyoto, Japan
Wakasugi
290ptsLocal counter worth booking after the temple.

About Wakasugi
A husband-and-wife counter restaurant near Kinkaku-ji, Wakasugi holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025 and is rated 4.6 across 203 reviews. At ¥¥¥, it is the most accessible Michelin-recognised option in Kita Ward — easy to book, genuinely local in feel, and worth the trip from central Kyoto for lunch kaiseki or à la carte dinner.
Verdict: Should You Book Wakasugi?
Wakasugi is easy to book and worth booking — particularly if you are visiting Kinkaku-ji and want a meal that feels local rather than tourist-facing. This is a counter-style Japanese restaurant in Kita Ward run by a husband-and-wife team, holding a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025 and rated 4.6 across 203 Google reviews. It sits in a neighbourhood where serious dining options are thin, and it fills a gap deliberately: more considered than an izakaya, less formal and less expensive than kappo. If you are eating your way through central Kyoto's kaiseki circuit at venues like Isshisoden Nakamura or Kikunoi Roan, Wakasugi offers a useful counterpoint: a ¥¥¥ neighbourhood anchor rather than a destination splurge.
Portrait: What Wakasugi Actually Is
The room is a counter. That detail matters more than it might seem. A counter-style restaurant in Japan — particularly one operated by a couple , means the physical space is intimate and the service dynamic is direct. You are not seated in a large dining room being handled by a floor team. You are at the bar, close enough to the kitchen that conversation happens naturally, and the couple running the restaurant designed it that way deliberately. They wanted neighbours to gather. They wanted the feel of community dining that a pub provides, without the pub format, and without the distance of formal kappo.
The address puts you in Kita Ward, five minutes from the World Heritage site of Kinkaku-ji Temple. That proximity shapes the venue's identity in a concrete way. Most of the eating options immediately around Kinkaku-ji skew toward tourists: quick bites, set menus engineered for turnover. Wakasugi is not that. It was opened by a couple who loved the location and wanted to contribute to the neighbourhood's daily life, not to its tourist economy. That intent shows up in the format: à la carte at dinner, kaiseki multi-course at lunch. The à la carte structure is a deliberate choice , it puts the customer's preferences first rather than locking everyone into a fixed progression.
If you have been once and are returning, the à la carte menu is where to focus. The smoked salmon and herring-roe potato salad is cited as standard fare in Michelin's own record for the venue , not a seasonal special, a reliable anchor dish. For returning guests, that consistency is the point. You are not chasing a tasting menu that rotates; you are building familiarity with a kitchen that has a clear point of view and executes it steadily.
Lunch is a different format entirely. The kaiseki multi-course structure at lunch is not incidental , the couple uses the meal as a vehicle for conversation. The pacing of multi-course service gives them time to engage with each guest at the counter. If you want to experience the social dimension that defines this restaurant's identity, lunch is the format that delivers it most fully. For dinner, the à la carte approach gives you more control but a slightly different atmosphere.
Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024, 2025) confirm a level of technical consistency that the price tier does not always guarantee in Kyoto. The Michelin Plate recognises good cooking , it is not a star, but it is a meaningful signal that the guide's inspectors found the food worth noting. At ¥¥¥, Wakasugi sits below the ¥¥¥¥ venues on the kaiseki circuit, which means the value-per-quality ratio is favourable for diners who want Michelin-acknowledged cooking without committing to a full kaiseki expenditure.
For context on what the wider Kyoto dining scene offers, see our full Kyoto restaurants guide. If you are planning broader travel in Japan, comparable neighbourhood-anchored experiences worth knowing include akordu in Nara and Goh in Fukuoka. For Tokyo comparisons in a similar register, Myojaku and Azabu Kadowaki are worth examining. And if Osaka is on your itinerary, HAJIME represents the higher end of what the Kansai region offers.
The neighbourhood context also matters for planning your day. Kita Ward is not central Kyoto. Visitors staying in Gion or the city centre will need to factor in travel time. The upside is that Wakasugi is unlikely to be crowded with the same diners you encounter elsewhere on a Kyoto restaurant circuit , it is genuinely local in a way that few Michelin-recognised venues in the city can claim. See our Kyoto hotels guide if you are considering basing yourself in the north of the city to make venues like this more accessible, and our Kyoto bars guide for what to do around the area in the evening.
Know Before You Go
Practical Details
- Price range: ¥¥¥
- Cuisine: Japanese, counter-style, à la carte (dinner) / kaiseki multi-course (lunch)
- Location: 5 Kinugasa Kaidocho, Kita Ward, Kyoto , close to Kinkaku-ji Temple
- Booking difficulty: Easy
- Michelin recognition: Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025
- Google rating: 4.6 (203 reviews)
- Format: Counter seating; husband-and-wife operation
- Lunch format: Kaiseki multi-course only
- Dinner format: À la carte
- Hours: Not confirmed , verify before visiting
- Phone / website: Not listed , check Google Maps or contact directly
How It Compares
See the comparison section below for Wakasugi against its Kyoto peers.
Pearl Picks: More Kyoto Dining
Further afield in Japan: Harutaka in Tokyo, 1000 in Yokohama, 6 in Okinawa. For more on the Kyoto area: our Kyoto experiences guide and our Kyoto wineries guide.
Compare Wakasugi
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wakasugi | Japanese | ¥¥¥ | Easy |
| Gion Sasaki | Kaiseki, Japanese | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| cenci | Italian | ¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Ifuki | Kaiseki | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Kyokaiseki Kichisen | Japanese | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| SEN | French, Japanese | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
A quick look at how Wakasugi measures up.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Wakasugi?
The smoked salmon and herring-roe potato salad are confirmed staples on the à la carte menu, so start there. At lunch, the only option is a kaiseki multi-course set — useful to know before you arrive. The à la carte format at dinner is intentional: the owners built the menu around letting customers choose rather than dictating a fixed progression.
Can I eat at the bar at Wakasugi?
Yes — the entire restaurant is counter-style, so every seat is essentially at the bar. That layout is the point: it puts you in direct contact with the couple running the kitchen and shapes the whole tone of the meal. If you prefer table seating, this is not the right format.
What should I wear to Wakasugi?
This is a neighbourhood counter restaurant, not a high-end kappo room — the owners explicitly positioned it that way. Neat, comfortable clothing is appropriate. You do not need to dress formally, but turning up in hiking gear after a full day at Kinkaku-ji may feel off given the intimate counter setting.
What should a first-timer know about Wakasugi?
Lunch and dinner operate on different formats: lunch is kaiseki multi-course only, dinner is à la carte. The restaurant holds a Michelin Plate (2024 and 2025), which signals consistent quality without the pressure of a starred experience. It sits in Kita Ward, close to Kinkaku-ji, so it works well as a post-temple meal rather than a destination in its own right.
How far ahead should I book Wakasugi?
The venue is described as approachable and neighbourhood-facing rather than hard-to-get, so booking pressure is lower than at Kyoto's starred restaurants. That said, counter-style rooms have limited seats by definition. Booking a few days to a week ahead is a sensible precaution, especially around peak Kinkaku-ji tourist periods in spring and autumn.
Does Wakasugi handle dietary restrictions?
The à la carte format at dinner gives you more control over what you order than a fixed omakase or kaiseki would, which helps if you have restrictions. At lunch, the kaiseki set is the only option, which offers less flexibility. No specific dietary policy is documented for this venue, so contact them directly before visiting if you have serious requirements.
Is Wakasugi good for solo dining?
Yes — counter-only seating is one of the formats that works best for solo diners in Japan. You sit directly facing the kitchen, the couple engages with customers as part of the service, and there is no awkward large table to fill. At ¥¥¥ pricing with Michelin Plate recognition, it is a solid solo option after a morning at Kinkaku-ji.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Kyoto
- OgataOgata is a 16-seat kaiseki counter in Shimogyo, Kyoto, holding two Michelin stars and ten years of Tabelog Gold recognition. Dinner runs JPY 60,000–79,999 before drinks and a 10% service charge. Booking is near impossible without months of advance planning, but for serious kaiseki at the counter, it earns its place on any shortlist.
- MizaiMizai holds three Michelin stars and a sustained Tabelog track record across nearly a decade, with dinner running to ¥80,000–¥99,999 per person all-in. Chef Hitoshi Ishihara structures the meal around the spirit of the tea ceremony in a 15-seat room inside Maruyama Park. Book for a serious special occasion; reservations are near-impossible to secure without months of advance planning.
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